The latest Trump Tweet mentions investigating voter fraud

On Wednesday morning, Donald Trump tweeted that he would request an examination concerning voter misrepresentation, including charged votes by undocumented migrants, individuals who are professedly enrolled to vote in more than one state and those enlisted to vote who are dead. The president said that relying upon the consequences of the examination, he would call for reinforcing up the voting systems.

Trump’s declaration comes after the White House multiplied down on Tuesday that the president trusted the exposed case that a great many individuals voted wrongfully, costing him the prominent vote. Majority rule candidate Hillary Clinton beat Trump by almost 3 million in the prominent vote however did not secure the quantity of Electoral College votes essential for a triumph.

On Tuesday, White House Press Secretary Sean Spicer told journalists, “The President does believe that the facts as I know them. He’s stated that before, I think he has stated his concerns of voter fraud and people voting illegally during the campaign and continues to maintain that belief based on studies and evidence people have presented to him.”

Two sources told NBC News that Trump spent the initial ten minutes of a bipartisan meeting with congressional pioneers at the White House on Monday discussing the crusade and rehashing the charge that 3 to 5 million individuals voted unlawfully. Those figures seem to originate from two distinct reviews, however creators of both have approached to state that their reviews don’t bolster hypotheses of gigantic voter misrepresentation.

A 2012 Pew report discovered a huge number of invalid voter enlistments because of individuals moving or kicking the bucket, however the report’s creator, official executive of the Center for Election Innovation and Research David Becker said in late November that the review found no confirmation of voter misrepresentation. A moment study was an exceptionally reprimanded work by Old Dominion University teachers who discovered 14 percent of non-nationals said saying they were enlisted to vote. The review depended on an example of a couple of hundred respondents.